The Plasmodium liver-specific protein 2 (LISP2) is an early marker of liver stage development

hypnozoites persist in the liver, cause malaria relapse and represent a major challenge to malaria elimination. Our previous transcriptomic study provided a novel molecular framework to enhance our understanding of the hypnozoite biology (Voorberg-van der Wel A, et al., 2017). In this dataset, we id...

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Veröffentlicht in:eLife 2019-05, Vol.8
Hauptverfasser: Gupta, Devendra Kumar, Dembele, Laurent, Voorberg-van der Wel, Annemarie, Roma, Guglielmo, Yip, Andy, Chuenchob, Vorada, Kangwanrangsan, Niwat, Ishino, Tomoko, Vaughan, Ashley M, Kappe, Stefan H, Flannery, Erika L, Sattabongkot, Jetsumon, Mikolajczak, Sebastian, Bifani, Pablo, Kocken, Clemens Hm, Diagana, Thierry Tidiane
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:hypnozoites persist in the liver, cause malaria relapse and represent a major challenge to malaria elimination. Our previous transcriptomic study provided a novel molecular framework to enhance our understanding of the hypnozoite biology (Voorberg-van der Wel A, et al., 2017). In this dataset, we identified and characterized the Liver-Specific Protein 2 (LISP2) protein as an early molecular marker of liver stage development. Immunofluorescence analysis of hepatocytes infected with relapsing malaria parasites, in vitro ( ) and in vivo ( ), reveals that LISP2 expression discriminates between dormant hypnozoites and early developing parasites. We further demonstrate that prophylactic drugs selectively kill all LISP2-positive parasites, while LISP2-negative hypnozoites are only sensitive to anti-relapse drug tafenoquine. Our results provide novel biological insights in the initiation of liver stage schizogony and an early marker suitable for the development of drug discovery assays predictive of anti-relapse activity.
ISSN:2050-084X
2050-084X
DOI:10.7554/eLife.43362